Gemini - Tilbake til hovedsida
Research news from NTNU and SINTEF
NORWEGIAN VERSION
NTNU
SINTEF
LAST ISSUE
NEWS
SEARCH

Frontpage

Bookmark and Share  

Download GEMINI (PDF, 3,1 MB)

Earlier editions in English

GEMINI WINS JOURNALISM AWARD
Read more about Gemini

EDITORS IN CHARGE

Editor-in-chief SINTEF:
Director of communications Petter Haugan

Editor-in-chief NTNU:
Information Director Christian Fossen

Editor SINTEF:
Åse Dragland
Email: Ase.Dragland@sintef.no
Tel: +47 73 59 24 76
Fax: +47 73 59 83 50

Reporters: Svein Tønseth and Christina B. Winge

Postal address: Gemini, SINTEF, N-7465 Trondheim, Norway

Editors NTNU:
Nina Tveter
Email: nina.tveter@ntnu.no
Tel: +47 73 59 53 21
Fax: +47 73 59 54 37

Reporters: Lisa Olstad and Synnøve Ressem


Translation and English editing:
Hugh Allen, Stewart Clark and Nancy Bazilchuk.

 

Computer system for dementia patients

A computer screen in the living room can help dementia sufferers to check the time and date and to remember appointments.

Bookmark and Share  

Dementia
HELPFUL MEMORY AID: People who have tested the system have enjoyed the experience.
Photo: SINTEF Technology and Society

The health services labour force is shrinking, there are more and more old people, and a very high proportion of them are plagued by deteriorating short- and long-term memory. All this has created a need for computer-based solutions that will enable elderly people to live safely in their own homes, but at the same time, the technology needed to take special care of them is expensive. On top of this, different standards for home sensors create problems.

This situation formed the backdrop for the EU’s decision two years ago to launch a series of projects to make it simpler for industry to develop new equipment in this field. One of these projects was called Mpower, which had the goal to create a computer platform that could be used for various purposes and meet a wide range of needs among its target group.

Reminder board
What is being tested in Norway today is a simple communication system based on a computer screen, aimed at elderly people who live at home but whose memory is failing. No keyboard is needed, only a touch on the screen, which displays the sun and the moon to indicate whether it is day or night, while a large clock-face shows the time.

“This is also a system for sharing information”, explains project manager Marius Mikalsen. The families of these patients are often anxious about how their parents are getting on, and this allows both them and the home help to enter messages that will be automatically displayed by the system. On the screen, for example, the elderly person might find “Remember to drink some water”, or “Take the number 52 bus”. Or current messages such as “The home help will be coming at nine o’clock this morning to give you a shower.”

Another useful feature is that family members can also access the system to check whether the elderly person’s appointments have been kept. Has she been to the doctor? Has he remembered to go to the day-care unit today?

“SINTEF has been project manager here, and it is nice to think that what we are now testing in Norway was developed by the University of Cyprus in collaboration with two Spanish companies, and that it runs on a server in Austria”, says Mikalsen.

Trials
Since last summer, a handful of elderly people have been trying the system in Trondheim and Grimstad. Meanwhile, a variant of the system is being tested in a nursing home near Krakow in Poland. This version uses sensors and GPS to offer smart solutions both in the house and outdoors to sound the alarm if an elderly person is moving around in an unsafe area.

Mpower ended in June 2009. SINTEF is trying to extend the project in collaboration with the local authorities in Trondheim.

Åse Dragland

Contact: Marius Mikalsen, SINTEF ICT
Phone: +47 735 92 929  Email: Marius.Mikalsen@sintef.no


Published October, 2009

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Subscribe to Gemini for free

Subscribe to newsletter



powered by FAST

REGULAR FEATURES :

FROM THE DIRECTORS' CHAIRS
Directors


NEWS IN BRIEF
NEWS IN BRIEF 2
VISTAS:
Satellites monitor ocean currents.
RESEARCHER Q&A:
Researcher

Kelp in the tank
Jorunn Skjermo is doing her best to ensure that cars can be powered by green fuel from the sea.
INTERLUDE:
UFO at sunset?